Indianapolis Times, Indianapolis, Marion County, 30 January 1940 — Page 14
Producer-Author Conferences Sometimes
Develop Into
By PAUL HARRISON
P retty Wild Sessions
: HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 30.—One of the most fantastic institutions in movie business is the story conference, at which the producer and his director and writers sit and bat around ideas. ideas are pretty wild, but they must be considered seriously—especially, of course, if they are advanced by the producer. Writer Henry Duffy arrived late at Darryl Zanuck’'s office for a
story conference on the Brigham Young picture, which will deal with the Westward migration of the Mormons. Zanuck said: “Sit down, Henry. We were just talking about the skating sequence, and it seemed—" “Skating in the Brigham Young story?” interrupted the writer. “Yes,” said the big boss. © “You know the part where the Mormons reach the Mississippi River and find it's frozen over? Well, we thought it'd be a good idea to have Sonja Henie, dressed as an Indian girl, meet ’em there. She'd do a short number, and then the Mormons would put on skates and she'd lead them across the river. Don’t you think that would be effective?” “Why—ah—" stammered the bewildered Duffy, “why, yes! Sure —that’d be swell!” The story conference ended right there—with Zanuck and the other men in hysterics.
» » #
ANOTHER WRITER, Jack Moffit, tells of an unintentional but very practical joke he played on producers. When the ‘‘Life of Emile Zola” was previewed more than two years ago, Moffit bought a page in each of the local trade papers and filled the space with a glowing tribute to the picture. Actually he had nothing whatever to do with the picture or story; he merely was in an expansive mood and wanted to say that he was proud to be associated with an industry which could produce such an epic. “But that ad kept me working steadily after that,” he says. “I got any number of job offers. Everybody thought ‘that I had written ‘Zola’.” » » ~
IF ANYBODY WANTS to hire an intelligent man cheaply, I know where you can get the husband of a distinguished movie actress. “I've got to find me a job—any kind of job, and right away,” he said the other evening. “They're going to start taking the census pretty soon, and when the man comes to our house and says, ‘What's your occupation?” I'm darned if I'm just going to tell him ‘Husband’!”
= » td
NOAH BEERY JR. tells about a free-lance producer, a happy-go-lucky fellow, ‘who, after a long period of inactivity, promoted a deal to make a million-dollar picture. On the strength of it, he went out and bought an 18-room house, a sleek imported roadster and a flock of new suits. But at dinner at a friend’s home that evening he seemed preoccupied and gloomy. Later he led the host into the patio and said, “Bill, I
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g INDIANAPOLIS Yl.
YMPHON Fabien Sevitzky, Conductor
ORCHESTRA Soloist
RICHARD CROOKS .,
Tenor Murat Theater, Feb. 2, 3 Prices:
i, $1.50, $2, $2.50, $3
Murat Box Office—RI-9597
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THE . SWINDLING OF Lupe Velez by a fortune teller, who used the ancient package-switch, has given the flicker y one of its loudest laughs. And Velez herself is fit to be tied, these days, because almost every mail brings a package from some ribbing friend. Notes say, “Put under your pillow for three nights -and your wish will come true.” The packages mostly contain rece ords of gypsy music. The swindle wouldn’t have been so funny without the Mexican actress’ wise and violently age gressive reputation. There's the story of how a bibulous babe insulted Johnny Weissmueller at a party by declaring loudly that she didn’t like his face, his acting or anything about him. He said: “It’s a good thing for you I'm not still married to Lupe, or she'd pull out all your hair and knock out all your teeth!”
Crooks Will Sing With Symphony
American-born tenor of the Metropolitan Opera, will be soloist with the Indianapolis Symphony Orchestra in the subscription concerts which Fabien Sevitzky will conduct at the Murat on Friday afternoon and Saturday evening. Three arias and a song by Frank LaForge will be Mr. Crooks’ contribution to the program. The arias are “O del mio dolce ardor,” from! Gluck’s “Paris and Helen”; “Il mio tesoro in tanto,’ from Mo-. zart’s “Don Giovanni,” and “Le Reye” from “Manon,” by Massenet. Mr. Sevitzky will open the program with a performance of Howard Hanson’s “Romantic” Symphony No. 2. Between Mr. Crooks’ two groups he will play the two Nocturnes by Debussy, “Nuages” and “Fetes,” and in conclusion, the “Bolero” of Maurice Ravel.
Sn To
HOLLYWOOD, Jan. 30 (U. P.).— The rest of the country shivered but Paramount Studio was glad today of the last week's cold spell. It made possible the filming of Augusta Tucker’s best selling novel, “Miss Susie Slagle,” without soapflake snowdrifts. The novel calls for scenes against a background of heavy snowdrifts in Washington and Baltimore. The studio, learning that deep snowdrifts occur only about once a decade in Washington and Baltimore, turned the problem over to the technical department and the experts there were about to haul out the white soap chip bags, when along came the cold spell. So en route to Hollywood today are
w. Proves Boon usie Slagle’
Eastern snow scenes.
DEVINE POINTS TO PARADE OF BANDS
|
Richard Crooks, the distinguished |"
There’s a bit of symbolism in
wondering if he’s in or out durin
youth and Hexperience. on
Glitter As
“save” the Metropolitan Opera.
completed. In 1880 there was a large demand for better opera than was currently provided -at the Academy of Music. Accordingly, the cream of New York society and wealth—the Morgans, the Vanderbilts, the Rockefellers, the Iselins, the Goelets, the Roosevelts and others (totalling 70 in all)—formed the Metropolitan Opera-House Company, Ltd. They built themselves a large, ornate Whife Elephant.
The undertaking was an instant financial failure—losing over $600,000 in first year. But the crowning blow came when, on Saturday morning, Aug. 27, 1892, a workman carelessly dropped a cigaret in the Met paint room. Up went smoke, and with it went a large part of the Met and all of the Metropolitan Opera-House Company, Ltd.
‘New Plan Is Effected
Again New York’s society came to the rescue. Thirty-five of The Four Hundred, half of them stockholders in the original company, raised $2,100,000, called themselves the Metropolitan Opera and Real Estate Company and bought "the property. The new company was wary. Why put up its own money to produce the operas? Why not lease the house to a producing company? This was done. Instead of paying any rent for the house, the producing company gave each of the 35 stockholders a free parterre box. It was this parterre-box section which became famous as the “Diamond Horseshoe.” Diamond, indeed it was. Each of the box holders: had put up $60,000 in cash to launch the venture. And in addition each pledged to pay $15 annually on each share of stock he owned to keep up the property, etc. This came to $4500 a year, and proved to be the original fly in the ointment.
‘Salome’ Was 1907 Shock
The February band barade at Tom Devine's Music Hall will include appearances by Anson-Weeks, Rudy Bundy, Little Jack Little, Jimmy James and Jimmy Wald. Mr. Devine has various contracts with the orchestras for one, two and three-night engagements. The Weeks outfit will appear at the Music Hall on Saturday night, while Bundy and his band are booked in for the following evening.
CHOIR TO OFFER 3D ANNUAL CONCERT
The Indianapolis Civic Choir, of |
The fly was long in taking wing. For years everything went smoothly. There were ups and down, of course, and occasionally shocks—as when, in 1907, New York's elite were treated to a passionate strip-tease, known to grand opera as “Salome.” There has been artistic temperament, too, through the years. One of the more recent feuds involved Beniamino Gigli, famed tenor. He let loose his emotions over the question of who was who, in the opera and who should get paid the most. Conductors, too, have all but threatened to cut off their arms
WHEN DOES IT START?
APOLLO
which Floyd Jones is organizer and director, will give its third annual concert tomorrow night at
| the Roberts Park Methodist'Church.
The 175-voice choral group includes the Floyd Jones Singers and the choirs of five churches directed by Mr. Jones’ students. A varied program of anthems, hymns and spirituals will be offered tomorrow evening.
LONG SETS RECITAL
Clifford D. Long will present a group of his vocal students, including 11 soloists, a student choir and a male chorus, in a midyear recital at 8 p. m. tomorrow in the Wilking Auditorium. Anita Meggenhofen, Mirian Bosworth and Martha E. Stephens will be accompanists.
LLOYD NOLAN
EEK! Seemd BOW WN WEEK!
Barbara Stanwyck a Fred MacMurray
‘REMEMBER ET
“Remember the Night,” with Barbara Stanwyck, Fred MacMurray, at 11:32, 1:38. 3:44, 5:50. 7:56 and 10:02. CIRCLE “The Earl of Chicago,” with RobMontgo mery, ward Arnold, wen. at 11, 1:48, 4:36,
0 Maisie,” with Ann Sothern, Jon Carroll. Rita Johnson, at 12:38, , 3:26, 6:14 and 9:02.
INDIANA “The Fizhunt 69th,’ with James Cagney, Pat O ot Gear e Brent, at, 12:41 _ <2 7:03 a “The Who Wou lant Talk,” with Floyd” Nolan. at 11:29, 2:40, 5:51
LOEW’S “Gone With the Wind.” with Clark Gable, Vivien om Leslie Howard, Olivia de illand: continuous week-day matinees from 10 evening performances at 8 Sunday matinee, 2 p. m.
LYRIC
“Hollywood Oem h’ Revue,” Pik Marie Wagon, “and Wing, Iaith her orchestra,
a. m.; D. m.;
dorf, the Metropolitan Opera’s young Wagnerian conductor, has been
Kerstin Flagstad and Lauritz Melchior, stars of the Met's Wagner contingent, have been complaining about the 27-year-old German's
(olden Horseshoe Loe:
NEW YORK, Jan. 30 (NEA)>=The dead don’t care for opera. Behind this apparent truism lies the largest part of the reason that a nation-wide campaign has just been launched to raise $1,000,000 to
To make this clear, it is necessary to go back to 1883—the year in which Manhattan's yellow-brick, squat Metropolitan Opera House was
these door signs. For Eric Leins-
1g a recent flurry of temperament.
» 2
Met Retrenches
for a variety of reasons. Only now two of the Met's most pampered pets, tenor Lauritz Melchior and soprano Kirsten Flagstad, are displaying front-page temperaments in a quarrel with the brilliant young conductor Erich Leinsdorf.
Depression Is Blow
But fires or feuds are unimportant as long as money rolls in. From 1908 to 1929, under the shrewd direction of Guilio Gatti-Casazza, the company producing the operas made, money annually. But came the depression and also the fly. By 1932 a reserve of over a million dollars had been wiped out. Every year the Met lost money. Opera is expensive to produce— about $13,000 an evening. And here enter the dead. By 1939, many of the 35 stockholders who formed the Metropolitan Opera and Real Estate Co. had died. Yet for each share of stock they had owned, their estate had fo pay $15 a year. Estate executors began to balk. The long-expected announcement finally came: At the end of the current season the Metropolitan Opera and Real Estate Co. lt can no longer lease the Met 1S. 3 The Metropolitan Opera Association cannot pay to lease the Met: Its expenses are too high already. An impasse seemed likely, with opera the loser.
New Era at Hand
Is the opera worth saving? Many think so. They point to the 10,000,000 people throughout the nation who listen to the opera broadcasts every Saturday afternoon. So a reorganization is proposed. The Metropolitan Opera Association is to buy the Met from its stockholders—alive and dead. The plans call for making the Met into a national music center—a pay-as-it-goes proposition. Today, managers of the opera's fund campaign reported they had received 10,000 donations from music lovers of 30 states and Canada.
ROBINSON CAST
“This Man Reuter,” story of the journalist who founded the international Reuter’s News Agency, will be a starring vehicle for Edward G. Robinson, following completion of “Brother Orchid.”
GEORGE, MERLE TEAM UP
George Brent and Merle Oberon, who have just completed “We Shdill Meet Again,” will be costarred again in the film version of Margaret
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES OPERA HIS BATTLEGROUND
CAR TO INSTALL ‘BLIND LANDING’ AT 10 AIRPORTS
System Perfected Here Ready for Fields on U. S. Priority List.
Times Special : WASHINGTON, Jan. 30. — The Civil Aeronautics Authority announced today if is ready to proceed with installation of instrument landing equipment at approximately 10 air terminals throughout the coun-
try. _ The “blind” landing system was perfected at the Indianapolis Municipal Airport and is known as the Indianapolis-CAA system.
First List Announced
The Authority’s program, which was recently indersed by a special committee of the National Academy of Sciences, calls for an, extended service testing of the equipment. The exact locations for the servetest installations has not been decided. Selections of the sites is to, be made from a priority list of 25 cities submitted to the Authority by the Radio ' Technical Committee for Aeronautics after the committee’s test inspection of the system at Indianapolis last summer. The cities and the airports, when the city has several, are New York (North Beach), Chicago, Los Angeles (Mines Field), ‘Kansas City, Atlanta, Seattle (Snohomish), Ft. Worth, Oakland, Washington, D. C. (Gravelly Point), Memphis, Salt Lake City, Minneapolis, Miami, pittsburgh, Detroit (Wayne County Airport), Nashville, St. Louis, Columbus, Denver; Philadelphia, New Orleans, Albuquerque, Omaha, Cleveland and Brownsville,
Bids Expected Soon
The list was compiled on the basis of those airports possessing best advantages . for service-testing the equipment. Bids on the equipment outlined in specifications drawn recently are expected to be asked within the next few weeks.
The original experimental “blind” landing equipment at the Municipal Airport here will remain here for continued experimentation. The system will undergo additional. tests in two weeks during a scheduled meet-
sociation of America.
M’KESSON & ROBBINS PAY 2600 CREDITORS
NEW YORK, Jan. 30 (U.P.).— The drug firm of McKesson & Robbins, Inc., has made payments totaling $55,000 to 2600 small merchandise creditors, William J. Wardall, trustee, reported today. Settlement of the claims was made under authority of the U. S. Distriet Court. When all such small claims of $100 or less are settled the company will have paid approximately $150,000 to more than 8000 creditors, Mr. Wardall said. Payment of these small claims, under court direction, will save the company considerable administrative expense by reducing the number of creditors and so expedite .the reorganization of McKesson & Robbins begun Dec. 8, 1938.
INDIANAPOLIS GROUP ATTENDS BOSTON U.
Times Special BOSTON, Mass., Jan. 30.—Six In-
Boston University. They are -Floyd Leroy Cook, 1457 Thompson St., School of Theology; George Humphrey Dewsnop, 1869 Thompson Road, College of Liberal Arts; Betty Jane Macy, 325 Campbell Ave., School of Religious and Social Work; Howard Estill Mitchell, 2419 N. Capitol Ave., School of Education; Robert William Wenner, 1114 N. Ewing St., School of Theology, and Margaret M. Zimmer, 1 E.. 36th St., School of Religious and Social Work.
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W. R. Beck, Shelbyville, president.
Despite the snow which has blanketed much of the Midwest, moisture conditions over the heavy wheat growing areas of the United
States are very discouraging, A. W. Erickson, crop observer of Minneapolis, Minn., said today. Mr. Erickson, who was addressing the Indiana Grain Dealers Association at the Columbia Club, said that the area particularly affected by drought and sand storms was comprised of Kansas, Oklahoma, Texas, Nebraska, eastern Colorado and eastern New Mexico.
Board Members Chosen
The Association re-elected W. R. Beck, Shelbylville, president; C. T. Wilson, Sulphur Springs, vice president, and H. E. Miller, Bainbridge: J. O. Pape, Fowler; Claude M. Record, Indianapolis, and L. A. Garner, Lawrenceburg, as directors for two years. The Board re-elected R. B. MecConnel and Fred K. Sale, Indianapolis, and Miss Eva S. True as treasurer, - sécretary and assistant secretary, respectively.. * Holdover directors are C. C. Barnes, Winchester; Victor Stuckey, Berne; H. E. Hutton, Vincennes, and Hal Thompson, Kokomo. Mr. Erickson said that the wheat crop in Indiana was smaller than it had been for several years due to adverse conditions at seeding time. Government estimates place the 1940 wheat planting at 1,565, acres as compared with over 2,000,000 acres two years ago.
River Area Near Normal
He said there was an area northwest from Indianapolis toward Chicago and southwest toward Vincennes where part of the winter wheat seeding had not emerged. He explained that the drought has kept the wheat from germinating and that the cold weather struck before the plants could come up, It was undetermined, he said, just how much vitality the seed which is still ungerminated in the ground still possesses and whether it will come up at all. The wheat along the Ohio "iver is near normal, he reported. Mr. Erickson pointed out that he made no predictions as to wheat prices this year but that the prices already
Two officials of the Indiana Grain Dealers discuss the program of their 39th annual convention which will end its two day session today at the Columbia Club. Officers studying the convention agenda are Fred K. Sale, right, organization secretary from Indianapolis, and
Observer Advises Grain Men Here Drought Affects Six States; Reports Indiana Crop Smallest in Several Years.
on drought reports and might go higher. Fae W. Patrick, Indianapolis attorney, discussed “Labor Problems: How to Deal With Them” and Dr. Allen A. Stockdale of the National Association of Manufacturers talked on “The Future of America” at the closing session. A moving picture “Vitamins on Parade,” was shown by the Allied Mills., Inc., Ft. Wayne,
JAPAN TO OBSERVE 2600TH BIRTHDAY
WASHINGTON, Jan. 30.—Japan may be fighting in China and bat-| tling over trade with the United States, but that nation will take time out to celebrate the 2600th
Feb. 11. Japanese have to take the date on faith. Earliest recorded history in Japan started in the Eighth Century A. D. Chroniclers then delved into tradition and boldly wrote that Japan’s first emperor was enthroned in 660 B. C. and precisely on Feb. 11. This monarch entitled Jimmu was descended from the gods, they wrote; he led his own armies in conquest personally; planted his capital at Kyoto; lived to be 127 or 137 years old; was buried in a doublémound tomb with a moat around it. Modern archaeologists have examined similar tombs of ancient Japan. A mound on the plains of Yamato where Jimmu is said to have been buried is now marked by a mausoleum.
SEE IT TODAY!
(GONE WITH THE WIND
Weekday matinees are continuous (not reserved) 75¢ incl. tax (except Joges)s Come anytime from 9 a. m. up to 2:45 p.m. and see complete show. Doors open 9 a. m. A (8 p.m.) and Sun. Mat. (2 p.m.) are reserved $1.10 incl. tax Pity loges).
had jumped 16 or 17 cents a bushel
Tickets for 2 weeks now on sale.
birthday of the Japanese Bmpize,
_ TUESDAY, JAN. 30, 1940
M'NUTT, GARNER RANKED HIGHLY
Look. Says They May Be
Only Serious Contenders By Convention.
Times Special y NEW YORK, N. Y., Jan. 30.—Fed= eral Security. Administrator Paul V, McNutt ahd Vice President John Nance Garner may be the only serious contenders for the Demo= - cratic Presidential nomination by the time the convention meets, Look magazine declared today. Both men have a big jump on the field, Look said in presenting a comparison of the “Hoosier Adonis” and the “Texas Turtle.” The maga~ zine presented the assets and liae bilities of both candidates. Mr. McNutt’s assets, the maga zine said, the political “oomph”; a first rate mind; practical politician; strong administrator; comes from a “doubtful” state; has attractive wife: holds key post in New Deal; in prime of life, and experienced in foreign affairs. Matched against these nine assets are nine liabilities, Look says. They are that he is not indorsed by Roosevelt; not accepted by liberals; ini exposed position; opposed by Farley; almost too handsome; highly aggressive; declared martial law; ore ganized the “Two Per Cent Club,” and unfortunate last name.
TWO FOUND GUILTY IN LIBERTY THEFTS
LIBERTY, Ind., Jan. 30 (U. P.).— Charles Morgan’ and Cecil Huntinge ton, both of Liberty, have been found guilty of complicity in connection with thefts from Liberty business houses. They were sentenced yesterday to 90 days in jail and fined $10 and costs.
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